OT Vince McMahon Accused of Sex Trafficking by WWE Staffer He Paid to Keep Quiet

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  1. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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    A woman who received a payout from WWE boss Vince McMahon has accused McMahon, the company and a former executive of sex trafficking in a new lawsuit that raises questions about the breadth of an internal company probe conducted by a law firm last year.

    Janel Grant, a former employee at the wrestling firm’s headquarters, said in a lawsuit filed Thursday that she was abused and sexually exploited by McMahon while he was chief executive. She alleged that McMahon lured her with promises of career advancement, and then he allegedly exploited her and trafficked her to other men inside the company.

    Grant signed a nondisclosure agreement in 2022 in which McMahon agreed to pay $3 million for her to not discuss their relationship or to disparage him. The WWE received an anonymous tip in 2022 about the relationship and started a board investigation, which uncovered other payments by the CEO to women. Grant’s lawsuit said McMahon stopped making payments under the 2022 deal after the initial $1 million installment. The suit seeks to void the agreement and unspecified financial damages.

    Jerry McDevitt, McMahon’s attorney in the agreement with Grant, said he no longer represents the WWE founder. McMahon didn’t respond to requests for comment.

    The TKO GROUP, an entertainment giant that was recently formed by the merger of WWE and the UFC mixed martial-arts league, said in a statement: “While this matter pre-dates our TKO executive team’s tenure at the company, we take Ms. Grant’s horrific allegations very seriously and are addressing this matter internally.”

    McDevitt said in 2022 that the woman, whose name wasn’t yet public, hadn’t made any allegations of harassment. In a statement when The Wall Street Journal first reported on McMahon’s $3 million settlement, WWE said that the relationship was consensual and that it was taking seriously the allegations McMahon had engaged in misconduct.

    McMahon briefly retired from WWE in July 2022 following reporting by the Journal that revealed payouts to multiple women who had alleged sexual misconduct. The Journal reported that the board’s independent directors had retained law firm Simpson Thacher & Bartlett to conduct an investigation.

    Simpson Thacher’s investigation found $14.6 million in payments by the CEO to women who had accused him of sexual misconduct that should have been booked as business expenses. In November 2022, WWE said the board investigation was completed and the company restated past securities filings. McMahon repaid the company for the cost of the investigation and returned soon after.

    The lawsuit complicates the legal picture around 78-year-old McMahon. Federal prosecutors have been investigating the payouts and in July 2023 agents executed a search warrant for McMahon’s phone and served him with a grand-jury subpoena. No charges have been brought.

    “Throughout this experience, I have always denied any intentional wrongdoing and continue to do so,” McMahon said in 2023 about the federal probe. “I am confident that the government’s investigation will be resolved without any findings of wrongdoing.”

    Locked office doors

    The lawsuit, filed in a Connecticut federal court, describes in graphic detail Grant’s account of interactions with the businessman and TV personality. She alleged that McMahon and another WWE executive locked her in an office in WWE’s headquarters in Stamford, Conn., on June 15, 2021, and took turns sexually assaulting her while other staff were working.

    In the middle of another workday, on June 23, 2021, McMahon locked Grant inside his private locker room at WWE’s offices and forced himself on her over a massage table, the suit said. Later that day, McMahon’s personal assistant delivered $15,000 in Bloomingdale’s gift cards to Grant in her office.

    The suit also includes screenshots of explicit text messages that McMahon allegedly sent to Grant. A May 2020 message said: “i’m the only one who owns U and controls who I want to f— U.”


    Grant alleged that McMahon shared nude photos and explicit videos of her without consent with other WWE employees, unnamed executives and stars, and directed her to have sex with them. The suit cited a July 2020 text that said others at WWE wanted to have sex with her after seeing photos on McMahon’s phone, and the group laughed when he told them, “She may scream and try to say NO!!although it would B difficult to say anything with a c— down her throat.”

    Grant alleged the board investigation was a “sham.” She wasn’t interviewed by the board’s special committee and it didn’t request documents even though she said she would cooperate, the lawsuit said. It alleged that the company diverted attention away from McMahon’s abuse by focusing on the accounting for the payouts. Others at WWE knew about McMahon’s misconduct but worked to conceal the wrongdoing, according to the suit.

    Jeff Speed, a former WWE board member who co-led the board’s investigation, said Thursday that he remained confident in the investigation, which included outreach to Grant and engagement with her lawyer. He highlighted that McMahon left the company during the investigation.

    “While recognizing the horrific nature of the allegations in today’s lawsuit, I am not at liberty to comment on what was and was not learned during our investigation,” Speed said in a statement.

    McMahon, who was the controlling shareholder of WWE, returned to WWE in early 2023, elected himself to the board and replaced several directors. Upon his return, he negotiated a sale of WWE to the Endeavor Group, owner of the UFC. The deal created TKO Group and gave WWE an enterprise value of $9.3 billion.

    McMahon is now executive chairman and a major shareholder of TKO. This week, Netflix
    bought the rights to “WWE Raw” and other WWE shows in a deal valued at more than $5 billion. McMahon celebrated by ringing the opening bell with other TKO executives at the NYSE.


    In its statement, TKO said McMahon doesn’t control TKO nor does he oversee the day-to-day operations of the WWE. Shares of TKO slipped less than 1% in Thursday’s trading.

    Ann Callis, a lawyer for Grant, said the WWE was well aware of McMahon’s “history of depraved behavior, and it’s time that they take responsibility for the misconduct of its leadership.” She said her client hopes the lawsuit “will prevent other women from being victimized.”

    ‘Has to look legit’

    Grant’s lawsuit alleged that she met McMahon in March 2019 after an introduction from a manager in her apartment building. McMahon lived in the penthouse of the same building, and Grant was looking for a job after her parents had died.

    When they met, McMahon allegedly made promises of a job at WWE and showered Grant with gifts. During meetings that were supposed to be about the job, he greeted her in his underwear and repeatedly asked for hugs. Then, the suit said, he pressured her into sexual activities in return for employment and warned her to stay quiet about their interactions.

    Grant began working in June 2019 as an “administrator-coordinator,” a position McMahon created for her in WWE’s legal department. She said she expressed concerns that the job felt unearned, but McMahon told her that all she needed to do was not tell anyone and that “it just has to look legit.” Colleagues complained about overflowing inboxes, but Grant had little work.

    Meanwhile, McMahon allegedly sent her sexually explicit messages and his sexual demands increased. He forcefully used sex toys on her, including dildos he named after WWE wrestlers, causing her bruising and bleeding, the suit said. Grant alleged that she complained to McMahon and made attempts to end the relationship.

    Grant’s lawsuit alleged that she met McMahon in March 2019 after an introduction from a manager in her apartment building. McMahon lived in the penthouse of the same building, and Grant was looking for a job after her parents had died.

    When they met, McMahon allegedly made promises of a job at WWE and showered Grant with gifts. During meetings that were supposed to be about the job, he greeted her in his underwear and repeatedly asked for hugs. Then, the suit said, he pressured her into sexual activities in return for employment and warned her to stay quiet about their interactions.

    Grant began working in June 2019 as an “administrator-coordinator,” a position McMahon created for her in WWE’s legal department. She said she expressed concerns that the job felt unearned, but McMahon told her that all she needed to do was not tell anyone and that “it just has to look legit.” Colleagues complained about overflowing inboxes, but Grant had little work.

    Meanwhile, McMahon allegedly sent her sexually explicit messages and his sexual demands increased. He forcefully used sex toys on her, including dildos he named after WWE wrestlers, causing her bruising and bleeding, the suit said. Grant alleged that she complained to McMahon and made attempts to end the relationship.

    In March 2020, McMahon began sharing sexually explicit photographs and videos of Grant with other men, including other WWE executives and a former UFC heavyweight champion with whom WWE was actively trying to sign to a new contract, according to the suit. In a May 2020 encounter, McMahon defecated on her head during a threesome, the suit said.

    Her mental and physical health deteriorated so badly that McMahon sent her in November to a celebrity doctor for sessions at an alternative clinic where she never received any receipts or bills. McMahon also paid $20,000 to a surgeon on her behalf, the suit said.

    McMahon recruited people to have sex with Grant as well, including WWE’s former head of talent relations, John Laurinaitis, who is named as a defendant in the suit. McMahon directed her to visit Laurinaitis at his hotel rooms where she had sex with Laurinaitis prior to the start of workdays, the suit alleged. “I’ve left that hotel feeling bad about myself every time,” Grant told McMahon.

    In May 2021, McMahon allegedly told Grant that her presence in the legal department was holding up the hiring of a new general counsel for the company and thus transferred her to the talent-relations department, reporting to Laurinaitis. McMahon and Laurinaitis started her in a lower-level position but promised that she would soon be promoted to vice president, the suit said.

    McMahon controlled her professional and personal lives and subjected her to degradation, according to the suit. In the June 2021 encounter inside the WWE office, the suit said McMahon and Laurinaitis forced themselves on her and took turns restraining her for the other, while saying “No means yes” and “Take it, b—.”

    Laurinaitis, a former wrestler known as Johnny Ace and a longtime WWE executive, left the company in 2022. Laurinaitis hasn’t publicly commented on his departure.

    Laurinaitis didn’t respond Thursday to requests for comment.

    In July 2021, the suit said, McMahon instructed Grant to create personalized sexual content for a WWE superstar that he was trying to re-sign. The suit didn’t name the professional wrestler, but described him as both a UFC fighter and WWE talent. People familiar with the matter identified the wrestler as Brock Lesnar, one of WWE’s biggest names.

    Lesnar didn’t respond Thursday to requests for comment.

    The suit said McMahon shared the explicit photos with the star and informed Grant that “he likes what he sees.” After the star agreed to a new WWE contract, McMahon texted Grant in August 2021 to say “that part of the deal was f—ing U.”

    That December, McMahon gave Grant’s personal cellphone number to the WWE star, the lawsuit said. The wrestler asked her to send a video of herself urinating, the suit said, and after she did, he called her a “b—.” That same month, the suit said, the star expressed a desire to “set a play date,” but a snowstorm disrupted his travel plans.

    In January 2022, the suit said, McMahon told Grant that his wife, Linda McMahon, had discovered the relationship and he pressured Grant to sign an NDA in exchange for payments. The CEO warned Grant of reputational ruin that included pornographic content he had of her. He paid her about $1 million in February, the suit said, and later stopped making the payments.

    After Grant signed the NDA, McMahon continued the abuse, according to the suit. It alleged that he forced Grant to perform oral sex on him the last time they met and then attempted to traffic her to the WWE star in March 2022. She texted the star explicit photos as directed by McMahon, but they didn’t meet, the suit said.

    The lawsuit seeks a judgment that the NDA is invalid under state and federal law and compensatory and punitive damages under other laws, including the Trafficking Victims Protection Act.

    https://www.wsj.com/business/vince-...by-wwe-staffer-he-paid-to-keep-quiet-0b19b21c
     
  2. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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    For the Too Long, Didn't Read crowd here are just a few highlights...

     
  3. bulls_with_booz

    bulls_with_booz We're Selfish

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    [​IMG]

    Two things that come to mind:

    1) Triple H and Stephanie led some sort of counsel or disciplinary committee, investigation thing -- whatever, and basically chose to ignore these allegations. Almost sounds like wrestling storyline, but depending on how bad this gets, we might see some insane housecleaning. Shawn Michaels runs their developmental brand.
    2) I don't know how well known this story is, but in the late 2000s, they had what they called back then a diva, named Ashley Massaro. Good looking blonde punk rocker chick, was one of the last to ever do Playboy. She took her own life a few years back, and allegations surfaced of her being raped at a Tribute to the Troops event by soldiers. Paul London said as recently as two years ago that Vince McMahon would demand she fly with him on his jet and would be knocking on her hotel room door.

    https://www.wrestlinginc.com/news/2...vince-mcmahons-harassment-of-female-wwe-star/
    https://www.ringsidenews.com/2019/0...ng-the-troops-detailed-in-chilling-affidavit/

    Difficult to give a shit about the wrestling side of it all, but it's interesting to me that if this is a worst case scenario, goes to court, the WWE board tried to cover it up sort of deal, the only guy they'd have left with experience running WWE shows, booking them, would be Paul Heyman.

     
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  4. speeds

    speeds $2.50 highball, $1.50 beer Staff Member Administrator GFX Team

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    If you're unfamiliar with McMahon, he got the WWF/E as big as it is by screwing every other promoter in the country. He has at least one longstanding, credible rape accusation against him and likely covered up the murder of Jimmy Snuka's girlfriend (Jimmy is the killer). Far too many wrestlers died young as a result of how hard McMahon drove them, often being on the road for nearly the entire year, and the hard drinking and drugging culture he allowed and often engaged in personally. McMahon has always been a horrendous villain in wrestling and IRL. Or, average billionaire.
     
    Last edited: Jan 25, 2024
  5. BigGameDamian

    BigGameDamian Well-Known Member

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  6. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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